![]() |
| THE INFERNAL HULK No. 8, August 2026 |
To begin with it’s not made terribly clear from the Canadian illustrator’s layouts just what is happening when the titular character pays a visit to the resting place of Reverend Jonah Deveaux, and somehow utilises the Pious Gardener’s tree-growing abilities along with those of Glob Herman and the Multiple Man to create an enormous fruit-bearing conifer. Clearly this nefarious giant plant is going to cause the planet's population some problems in the near future. However, it’s genuinely difficult to see just what is going on with the ever growing evergreen from the various panels sketched of its diabolical birth.
Likewise the majority of onlookers will arguably have to wait until Doctor Banner calls General Thunderbolt Ross’s daughter by her first name before they twig Bruce is actually phoning up his ex-wife in Munchie, Indiana. This ultimately fiery exchange between the former couple is then made all the more bemusing by “your friendly neighbourhood comic artist” drawing the clearly angry woman either purposely self-harming herself by digging her fingernails into her arm as she attempts to make contact with her father, or inadvertently reopening the wounds she caused a few nights earlier when she freaked out over being unable to open a pot of ice cream.
Perhaps the biggest head-scratcher though is just how easily it appears the Avengers manage to penetrate down through the Earth’s crust in one of their quinjets and quickly discover the subterranean level lived on during “another Age of Monsters.” Now admittedly the planet’s surface has been somewhat recently ravaged by the Infernal Hulk’s recent (re)raising of the Living City and Iron Man’s “overpowered strike force.” But according to Gorham’s all-too brief depiction of Tony Stark piloting the flying vessel their journey is simply a matter of moments before they crash-land near the cavern hosting the mystical, all-healing tree supposedly made from God’s Blood.
![]() |
| The regular cover art of "INFERNAL HULK" #8 by Nic Klein |


No comments:
Post a Comment